Activity: From the earliest record of human existence, we have evidence of people making art. Art serves both as an expression of emotion and inner thoughts and as a recorder of history and the events of public life. Explain to your students that different areas of the world have vastly different art-making traditions and that the traditions covered in this mini-lesson are from the Western world only, spanning from the ancient Greeks to the present day.

Setting: We are able to study only the art that has survived
over the centuries. Many of the creative objects of the past have decayed,
were stolen, or were demolished as cultures won and lost disputed territories
 the victors destroying what they couldn't take. Because of this,
the bulk of the remnants from the Greeks, Romans, and even the Middle
Ages are architectural: Castles, palaces, churches, and monasteries endured
because only very rich families and the church had enough money to create
the kind of immense buildings that would stand the test of time. It is
not until the 15th century that we begin to have paintings that we can
study, and many of these were frescoes, which means they were painted
on the wet plaster of the walls of a house or church and allowed to dry
there. These paintings used albumen, a substance found in egg whites,
as their base. It was during the flowering of what is known as the Renaissance
that oil was discovered as a useful base for paint, and it is this
kind of paint that helped to produce the many masterpieces that are in
our museums today.

One of the other important discoveries of the Renaissance was perspective.
This is the idea that our eyes are drawn into the center of a picture,
just as they are drawn into the distance when we are looking outside.
It also means that things get smaller to our eyes when the objects are
farther away  a simple idea, but one that had not been represented
in painting before. There are many ways to explore this idea, but the
"disappearing square" (or circle, if your students are familiar with compasses)
is one of the simplest.

Students will need 8" x 11" paper, a ruler, and a
pencil (graph paper is especially helpful, but not necessary).

Begin by measuring 8" along on the longer side of
the 11" x 8" page. Draw a line to form a perfect square.

Next, within the borders of the first square, draw
a square that is 7 ½" on all sides (7" if you have less time).

Continue this process, drawing increasingly smaller
squares, until you have the final square, which is 1" all around.

Have students take a ruler and connect the corners
of all the squares  all the upper-right corners together, from
the biggest to the smallest square; then lower-left corners, etc., until
all four have a diagonal line running through them. Notice how the eye
runs to the center! For an example, look at http://www.olejarz.com/arted/perspective/.
This Web site has a drawing of the square, as well as animated examples
of perspective drawing.

Hang these creations on the wall and have students
look at them from any number of distances. They may want to sketch in
little objects in the center to see how the object looks within these
fields of distances.

Include a few prints of perspectival paintings
(see Resources below) alongside the squares to help your students see
how perspective works in painting.